(By Lawrence H. Conrad) In The-Michigan Daily Magazind for Sun., Oct. 16, there appeared an article by Delbert Clark which presented, with no attempt at summarizing, the opin- ions of a few campus authorities upon the relation of thinking to writing. I believe this relation to be vital. I think that the question, "Do thinkers write and do writers think?," should not be dismissed with the statement which this writer used in conclusion -"And there you are." I wish to voice the belief that great writers are invariably great thinkers, men of great ideas, either originating with themselves in a manner which none of us is able to describe, or which are so perfectly conceived that they become the property of the expositor by absorption. The amateur writer may and often does write a better English sentence than the established writer whose works are read widely, but the line of demarcation between these two is distinctly accentuated by the wealth of ideas and the value of the' ideas with which each is dealing; in short, the test of literary greatness in the present order of things is thought, new thought, clear thought and thought which has for any reason the quality of being arresting. C A great writer is nothing if not a great thinker, for after all It is the story-value of fiction, the critical-value of essays and articles and the thought- value of most poetry which stamps it as literature. The young writer who has ideas, however poorly expressed, who shows a tendency to begin with a line of, thought and carry it to a place where the reader's imagination has never been before, will receive instant encouragement from editors and publishers who will pass with a shrug any perfectly written manu- script which does not do this. The case of Swinburne, who "in a masterful fashion took the ideas of the ancient classical writers, many of them crude and ill-expressed, and re- wrote them, giving them a wonderful lustre and a lasting place In English verse,' is peculiar but it Is not unique. We cannot brand him a plagiarist without branding a good many others; we cannot say that he was not a great thinker unless we are very sure that all ideas, to be original, must spring full-clothed from the brain of their parent, and even then we must investigate; whetherthat parent had or had not previously swallowed, in turn, the parent of that idea. Where, Romances of After the War One of the most interesting features of the readjustment of human rela- tions after the war has been the some- times humorous or heart-appealing ro- mances of the returning men, many of whom have been wounded. Mrs. Bertha Lippincott Coles, has collected five of these romances under the title of "Wound Stripes." Of Interest to Geographers One of the msot interesting and little known countries in the world is Kash- mir, located on the edge of India. C. E. Tyndale Biscoe, M. A., has writ- ten a new book on this marvellous and beautiful land of valleys and snow- clad mountains. This is entitled, "Kashmir In Sunlight and Shade," and will be published in this country. at Writers and Great Thinkers after all, do ideas come from? dress which a great thinker has made thinker alone is able to supply. The Writers of fiction tell us that they for it, arrests our attention, records proper organization of a man's mind come "out of the air," traceable now a pleasing impression for having been is of greater value if he is to be a and then to in our minds before, and leads us out writer, than the development of his "a sunset-touch, into a field of thought which we were skill with the pen. A fancy from a flower-bell, some willing but unable to create for our- The "how" of writing is always s'- one's death, selves. ordinate to the "what" of writing. On' A chorus-ending from Euripides,-" Great thinkers are not of necessity cannot, in health, lose the technique or, it may be, from a personality that great writers, but they could be if of writing, once he has had it. It is is suggestive, from a half-sentence they would, for, as your authority has like riding a bicycle: once learned, it heard as one goes through a revolving pointed out, "Simultaneously with the is-a permanent acquisition and can be doorway, from any one of the many idea are born the words to fit it." called into practice at any time. Writ- experiences which befall each of us Writers often get their ideas from per- ers do, however, frequently go into daily, but which take their place in sons themselves unable to write litera- a decline for lack of ideas, thpugh literature only as they strike, like the ture (notoriously from their wives), their pen-strokes continue to be as seed which fell upon fallow ground, but ideas so borrowed are never whole sure and as virile as ever. Indeed, the the mind of a great thinker. The ideas; they are never carr-. to con- fact of ceasing to be a great thinker idea, then, half-formulated in our less- clusion, or, if seemingly entire, lack is the only catastrophe that can be- er minds, comes back to us in the the seasoning and spicing which a real fall a writer who is once established. BRRUN CI RD C RECORDS For November Now on Sale MA-Fox Trot .........................Isham Jones' Orchestra WABASH BLUES-Fox Trot ..............Isham Jones' Orchestra WHY DEAR ?-Fox Trot.... ............Isham Jones' Orchestra MY SUNNY TENNESSEE-Fox Trot....... Isham Jones' Orchestra AMERICAN PATROL ...........Walter B. Rogers and His Band GENERAL MIX-UP, U. S. A.-March Walter B. Rogers and His Band SERENADE-Violin, Flute, Harp ..................Gondolier Trio SERENADE-French Horn, Flute, Harp ........ . ....Belvedere Tric I AIN'T NOBODY'S DARLING........ Harmonizers Male Quartet IT MUST BE SOMEONE LIKE YOU................ Billy Jones I'M LOOKING FOR A BLUE BIRD Al Bernard and Carl Fenton's Orchestra OH! BROTHER, WHAT A FEELIN'!............... Ernest Hare SERENADE DU TSIGANE-Violin Solo.............. Max Rosen O SOLE MIO-Tenor......................... Mario Chamlee FANTASIE IMPROMPTU-Pianoforte Solo..... Leopold Godowsky FAUST-Duet from Garden Scene .............Vessella's Italian Band BOHEME-Selection....................Vessella's Italian Band We inviteyou to call and look over the complete Brunswick List for November 460